Title :
Stable Feature Flow Fields
Author :
Weinkauf, Tino ; Theisel, Holger ; Van Gelder, A. ; Pang, Alex
Author_Institution :
Vision, Learning & Graphics Group, New York Univ., New York, NY, USA
fDate :
6/1/2011 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Feature Flow Fields are a well-accepted approach for extracting and tracking features. In particular, they are often used to track critical points in time-dependent vector fields and to extract and track vortex core lines. The general idea is to extract the feature or its temporal evolution using a stream line integration in a derived vector field-the so-called Feature Flow Field (FFF). Hence, the desired feature line is a stream line of the FFF. As we will carefully analyze in this paper, the stream lines around this feature line may diverge from it. This creates an unstable situation: if the integration moves slightly off the feature line due to numerical errors, then it will be captured by the diverging neighborhood and carried away from the real feature line. The goal of this paper is to define a new FFF with the guarantee that the neighborhood of a feature line has always converging behavior. This way, we have an automatic correction of numerical errors: if the integration moves slightly off the feature line, it automatically moves back to it during the ongoing integration. This yields results which are an order of magnitude more accurate than the results from previous schemes. We present new stable FFF formulations for the main applications of tracking critical points and solving the Parallel Vectors operator. We apply our method to a number of data sets.
Keywords :
computer graphics; feature extraction; flow visualisation; mechanical engineering computing; vortices; feature extraction; feature flow fields; feature tracking; flow field stability; parallel vectors operator; stream line integration; temporal evolution; time-dependent vector fields; vortex core lines; Bifurcation; Computer errors; Concrete; Data mining; Error correction; Feature extraction; Field-flow fractionation; Tensile stress; Flow visualization; feature extraction.;
Journal_Title :
Visualization and Computer Graphics, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TVCG.2010.93